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Jordanian Drowns Toddler in Pattaya to Punish Wife: Police

A file photo of Pattaya City. Photo: Stanislav Baranov / Flickr
A file photo of Pattaya City. Photo: Stanislav Baranov / Flickr

PATTAYA — A Jordanian man stands accused of murdering his own toddler by strapping him in a stroller and dumping him into the gulf off Pattaya, police said Tuesday.

Wael Zureikat, 52, was arrested at Suvarnabhumi International Airport while attempting to leave the country hours after his 18-month-old son was found dead Monday evening, according to immigration chief Lt. Gen. Surachate Hakparn.

The boy’s body was found still strapped to the the pram, floating in the water near Bali Hai Pier in Pattaya. Police said he had been dead at least two days.

Col. Apichai Krobphet, Pattaya police chief, said Zureikat confessed to killing his son late Friday night by pushing the pram off the pier.

Surachate said Zureikat wanted to take revenge against his 24-year-old wife after they got into a violent fight over their financial situation while on vacation there, and because he didn’t want to have children in the first place. He has been charged with murder.

Surachate said the wife, who hasn’t been identified, was still in shock after learning about her son’s death and still couldn’t make a statement. She’s currently under medical care at a local hospital, he added.

Clarification: This story has been updated with additional police statements about Zureikat’s motive.

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Most Thais Are Daily Straw Users – Especially Women, Survey Says

Photo: Pimtha / Instagram
Photo: Pimtha / Instagram

BANGKOK — One for the morning bottle of OJ, another for afternoon milk tea and yet one more for the dinner table’s glass of lime-infused ice water.

Over half of Thais who participated in a survey said they use plastic straws daily, with a fourth saying they used several in a day – especially women, online pollster YouGov announced Monday. The survey comes as Thailand faces a growing reckoning over its disposable culture in the form of dying sea life and overflowing landfills.

Asked about the results, a Greenpeace Thailand anti-plastics campaigner said it’s an understandable consequence of habit.

“As a woman, when I go out with my girlfriends, they like to use a straw because it’s convenient, or they didn’t refuse a seller putting one in their drink,” Pichmol Rugrod said.

The YouGov survey found that 24 percent of Thais use plastic straws multiple times a day, with 29 percent using one a day. Of the women surveyed, 59 percent use straws at least once a day, compared to 47 percent of men.

“Some are concerned about whether the cups they’re drinking from at some shops are clean, and some people who wear lipstick don’t want to leave a mark on the glass,” Pichmol said of possible reasons for the gender disparity.

Ultimately, gender was less of a determiner in who uses more plastic than lack of awareness, she added.

“It’s up to the individual,” she said.

The YouGov poll was conducted in February. YouGov selected 1,016 respondents from its pool of 165,000 Thais who have signed up to participate in return for compensation. They were selected by age, gender, income group and education level in order to be representative. The margin of error is plus or minus 3 percent.

Graphic: YouGov
Graphic: YouGov

“While most Thais believe that conserving the environment is paramount, this doesn’t appear to have translated into their actions,” head pollster Aisanart Wuthithankul said. “Our data shows significant numbers of Thais are still relying on single-use plastics in their daily lives.”

One-in-five respondents said they use straws many times a week, while about 10 percent said they use only one a week. Few respondents said they use straws less often than that.

Although more women admitted to being culprits, they were also more likely to carry reusable straws. Nearly half of the women (47 percent) said they owned one compared to 36 percent of men polled. It found younger people were more likely to own reusable straws.

Those who didn’t cited inconvenience, lack of need and not knowing where to get one as to why.

The reuse and recycling of plastics has become a growing cottage industry as society confronts the impact of its habits on health and the environment.

Photos: Campaign ลดขยะ สร้างสุข / Facebook
Photos: Campaign ลดขยะ สร้างสุข / Facebook

Those looking to relieve their consciences can donate new or cleaned used straws (the latter cut into short lengths 1- to 2-centimeters long) by mail to a Catholic hospice care center operated by the Diocese of Chanthaburi.

New straws will be used to help incontinent patients to drink water and the used pieces as pillow stuffing. Straws should be the standard size – about half a centimeter in diameter, not the larger type commonly used for bubble tea.

Straws can be donated through the end of the year by sending them to:

Diocesan Social Action Center of Chanthaburi (DISACC)
89 Moo 16, Khlong Hin Pun, Wang Nam Yen
Sa Kaeo 27210

The diocese can be reached by telephone at 089-939-8665 or 086-143-4118.

YouGov is a UK-based market research company.

Photos: Campaign ลดขยะ สร้างสุข / Facebook
Photos: Campaign ลดขยะ สร้างสุข / Facebook
Photos: Campaign ลดขยะ สร้างสุข / Facebook
Photos: Campaign ลดขยะ สร้างสุข / Facebook
Photos: Campaign ลดขยะ สร้างสุข / Facebook
Photos: Campaign ลดขยะ สร้างสุข / Facebook

Related stories:

How to Start Using Less Plastic in Bangkok Right Now

How to Donate, Recycle, Get Rid of Stuff in Bangkok

Try Soap Made From Bangkok Street Food Oil

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UK, EU Announce Change to Brexit Deal Ahead of Key Vote

European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker, left, greets British Prime Minister Theresa May during a round table meeting in December at an EU summit in Brussels, Belgium. Photo: Alastair Grant / Associated Press
European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker, left, greets British Prime Minister Theresa May during a round table meeting in December at an EU summit in Brussels, Belgium. Photo: Alastair Grant / Associated Press

STRASBOURG, France — Britain and the European Union emerged from last-minute talks late Monday to announce they had finally removed the biggest roadblock to their Brexit divorce deal, only hours before the U.K. Parliament was due to decide the fate of Prime Minister Theresa May’s hard-won plan to leave the EU.

On the eve of Tuesday’s vote in London, May flew to Strasbourg, France, to seek revisions, guarantees or other changes from European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker that would persuade reluctant British legislators to back her withdrawal agreement with the EU, which they resoundingly rejected in January.

At a joint news conference, May and Juncker claimed to have succeeded.

May said new documents to be added to the deal provided “legally binding changes” to the part relating to the Irish border. The legal 585-page withdrawal agreement itself though was left intact.

“In politics, sometimes you get a second chance. It is what you do with this second chance that counts. Because there will be no third chance,” Juncker warned the legislators who will vote late Tuesday.

“Let’s be crystal clear about the choice: it is this deal or Brexit might not happen at all,” he said.

May said the changes should overcome lawmakers’ qualms about a mechanism in the deal designed to keep an open border between Britain’s Northern Ireland and EU member Ireland. The mechanism, known as the backstop, is a safeguard that would keep the U.K. in a customs union with the EU until a permanent new trading relationship is in place.

Brexit-supporters in Britain fear the backstop could be used to bind the country to EU regulations indefinitely.

May said the new wording “will guarantee that the EU cannot act with the intent of applying the backstop indefinitely.”

“Now is the time to come together to back this improved Brexit deal and deliver on the instruction of the British people,” she said.

But the changes appear to fall well short of Brexiteers’ demands for a unilateral British exit mechanism from the backstop.

Pro-Brexit U.K. lawmakers said they would read the fine print and wait for the judgment of Britain’s attorney general before deciding how to vote on Tuesday.

Announcing the breakthrough in Britain’s House of Commons, Cabinet Office Minister David Lidington said lawmakers faced “a fundamental choice … to vote for the improved deal or to plunge this country into a political crisis.”

And Juncker warned Britain “there will be no new negotiations” if lawmakers rejected the deal again.

Britain is due to pull out of the EU in less than three weeks, on March 29, but the government has not been able to win parliamentary approval for its agreement with the bloc on withdrawal terms and future relations. The impasse has raised fears of a chaotic “no-deal” Brexit that could mean major disruption for businesses and people in Britain and the 27 remaining EU countries.

“This is a government in chaos, with a country in chaos because of this mess,” Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn said.

May has staked her political reputation on securing an exit deal with the EU and is under mounting pressure to quit if it is defeated again. She survived a bid to oust her through a no-confidence vote in December. As a result, she cannot be forced from office for a year.

The EU is frustrated at what it sees as the inability of Britain’s weak and divided government to lay out a clear vision for Brexit. It is irritated, too, that Britain is seeking changes to an agreement that May herself helped negotiate and approve.

May has been working frantically to save her deal, speaking by phone to eight EU national leaders since Friday, including French President Emmanuel Macron and German Chancellor Angela Merkel.

If Parliament throws out May’s deal again on Tuesday, lawmakers will vote over the following two days on whether to leave the EU without an agreement – an idea likely to be rejected – or to ask the EU to delay Brexit beyond the scheduled March 29 departure date.

Conservative lawmaker Nicky Morgan said May’s position will become “less and less tenable” if she suffers more defeats in Parliament this week.

“It would be very difficult for the prime minister to stay in office for very much longer,” Morgan told the BBC.

Alan Wager, a Brexit expert at the U.K. in a Changing Europe think tank, said Parliament this week could decisively rule out both May’s deal and a no-deal departure.

That, in turn, would make such options as a new Brexit referendum or a “softer” withdrawal from the EU lot more likely, he said.

“Finally, the House of Commons is going to have to make a final judgment on what it wants in terms of Brexit,” he said.

Story: Raf Casert, Jill Lawless

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Fearing More Assaults, Activist Asks For Army Protection

Ekachai Hongkangwan hands a letter to an army representative. Image: Ekachai Hongkangwan / Facebook

BANGKOK — A politician made headlines last week by scolding a soldier shadowing him on the campaign trail, but an activist Tuesday asked the military to do just that – follow him wherever he goes.

Having been assaulted by masked men for the sixth time in a year, pro-democracy campaigner Ekachai Hongkangwan formally requested the army keep him under close watch. The 44-year-old activist said it should have no problem providing him a security escort since it has done so for many politicians uninvited.

“I have been physically assaulted many times, and my belongings have been damaged, including my car,” Ekachai said. “Yet the army didn’t care about me at all, even though I have asked them to send soldiers to protect me in the past.”

Ekachai, well known for his one-man protests against the junta, said he was beaten by unidentified assailants at a government office last week. As with his other attacks in the past, police have yet to capture or identify any suspects.

Army spokesman Winthai Suvaree said the military will have to study procedure before approving or rejecting Ekachai’s request.

“Usually, there has to be a formal request, and those who file the requests are usually people holding important offices that need protection,” Col. Winthai said by phone. “We will look into the details.”

Speaking in front of army headquarters today, Ekachai also urged Army Chief Gen. Apirat Kongsompong to stop unwanted surveillance of politicians and stay true to his word to be neutral in the upcoming election.

“Gen. Apirat himself keeps stressing that the army will help the people, keep peace and order, and prevent any unrest during the election season,” the activist said.

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Boeing 737 Max Banned From Singaporean Airspace

SilkAir's new Boeing 737 Max 8 aircraft is seen through a viewing gallery window in 2017 parked on the ramp of Singapore's Changi International Airport. Photo: Wong Maye-E / Associated Press
SilkAir's new Boeing 737 Max 8 aircraft is seen through a viewing gallery window in 2017 parked on the ramp of Singapore's Changi International Airport. Photo: Wong Maye-E / Associated Press

SINGAPORE — Singapore’s civil aviation authority says it has temporarily banned all Boeing 737 Max planes from entering and leaving the country.

It noted in a statement on Tuesday that there have been two fatal accidents involving the aircraft in less than five months. Sunday’s deadly crash of an Ethiopian Airlines 737 Max 8 killed all 157 people on board.

The authority said the suspension starting later Tuesday will be “reviewed as relevant safety information becomes available.”

The suspension will affect SilkAir, a regional carrier that’s wholly owned by Singapore Airlines. It has six Boeing 737 Max 8 planes.

The authority said that flights to Singapore by China Southern Airlines, Garuda Indonesia, Shandong Airlines and Thai Lion Air will also be affected.

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Thai Men Want Fully Legal Weed – Women Less So: Poll

Bhumjaithai Party leader Anutin Charnvirakul, at center, at a Monday rally on Koh Lanta in Krabi province.

BANGKOK — Cannabis legalization is more of a winning issue with male voters than female who responded to a recent survey.

A wide majority of Thai men support the most ambitious pro-cannabis policies of a major political party, while that support falls to a minority of female voters, according to the results of a Super Poll survey released Tuesday.

Read: Thai Law: Foreigners and the Medical Marijuana Law, Explained

Men were somewhat more in favor. The pollster said 58.5 percent of men supported with pro-cannabis policies proposed by Bhumjaithai Party, which include full recreational legalization of marijuana. That support fell to 43.2 percent among working-age female respondents.

The poll neither publishes a margin of error nor discloses its selection methods. A representative said the surveys were conducted via face-to-face interviews, phone calls and email.

image big 5c872d4c7aea8

Near universal opposition existed to foreign ownership of Thai patents related to cannabis. Nine-in-10 of respondents agreed with rejecting non-Thai patent applications prior to the opening of the domestic market.

Read: Patents Reveal Foreign Pharma’s Secret Bid to Seize Thai Cannabis Market

By occupation, over half of farmers surveyed agreed with the cannabis policies espoused by Bhumjaithai – 51.8 percent. Even more enthusiastic were office workers at 71.4 percent.

The party, led by Anutin Charnvirakul, has proposed allowing every household to grow six plants that could only be sold to state agencies, estimating that it could generate 420,000 baht per family annually.

Read: High Stakes: Thai Party Plants Seeds for Pot Revolution

Super Poll Research Services is the project of Thammasat University sociology and architecture professor Noppadon Kannika. The poll was conducted between March 1 and March 11.

Related stories:

Thai Law: Foreigners and the Medical Marijuana Law, Explained

High Stakes: Thai Party Plants Seeds for Pot Revolution

Patents Reveal Foreign Pharma’s Secret Bid to Seize Thai Cannabis Market

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Abhisit Coalition Waffling Draws Fresh Flak

Flanked by other Democrat Party executives, chairman Abhisit Vejjajiva speaks at a Monday news conference at their offices in Bangkok.

BANGKOK — Treading a thin line after saying his party wouldn’t support the junta leader becoming prime minister after the election, Democrat Party leader Abhisit Vejjajiva has found himself in hot water for walking back his comments.

Hours after announcing his opposition to Prayuth Chan-ocha’s bid to remain in power, Abhisit said Monday his party is willing to form a coalition with the pro-junta Phalang Pracharat Party if it doesn’t insist Prayuth be PM. He also opened the door to a coalition with archrival Pheu Thai under certain conditions.

“I have not spoken about this in the past because I thought my stance was already clear,” Abhisit said. “But many debate forums want the politicians to debate about their stances … so I had to announce my stance clearly, so we won’t waste any more time.”

Read: Abhisit Rules Out Voting for Prayuth

The Democrat chairman also said he personally respects Prayuth’s contribution to the country during his tenure, but he believes the general should not serve another term.

“I cannot make decisions based on my personal relationship. I have to think of this country in a long term,” Abhisit said. “I insist that conflicts will certainly break out in the future if [Prayuth] holds on to his power. Gen. Prayuth would be at the center of the likeliest conflict to break out after the election.”

As for the Pheu Thai Party – which has bested the Democrats in every general election for nearly two decades – Abhisit said any partnership depended on it becoming free from the domination of a few people, an implicit reference to fugitive former premier Thaksin Shinawatra.

Abhisit announced his party’s conditions at a Monday news conference after releasing a video saying he “definitely will not support Gen. Prayuth Chan-ocha to be the next prime minister.”

Seeking to refine that position, he told reporters the party wants to form a government after elections with other partners as long as they don’t extend junta rule or engage in corruption.

Reactions were swift. The de facto head of the pro-junta Action Coalition for Thailand Party, Suthep Thaugsuban, asked from a Phuket rally stage last night which side Abhisit was on. He declared his party would never join a coalition with Thaksin-aligned Pheu Thai and accused Thaksin of buying his way into office and corruption.

A former Democrat for 37 years himself, Suthep said he was saddened to hear Abhisit speak. He said the party which he left as secretary general to lead anti-government street protests, was like his home.

“It means Abhisit is willing to join hands with Thaksin’s side. The words that Abhisit uttered, that [the party] won’t support Gen. Prayuth to become prime minister to extend his power are the exact words used by the pro-Thaksin camp. If you won’t support Prayuth, then who will you support?” Suthep said.

Pheu Thai Party MP candidate Watana Muangsook also criticized Abhisit for saying the party is willing to form a coalition with Phalang Pracharat only hours after saying he wouldn’t support Prayuth, who is the party’s PM candidate, as prime minister.

“If he is not confused, then he must be acting in a political soap opera,” Watana wrote online Tuesday morning.

At yesterday’s news conference, Abhisit rejected allegations that he was trying to have things both ways. The Democrats will only join hands with Phalang Pracharat if the latter has no intention of serving as a proxy for Gen. Prayuth’s ongoing influence, he said.

“I’m surprised to see that after I give my answers like this, some [Pheu Thai] supporters still say I didn’t make myself clear,” Abhisit said. “What I’m trying to stress is that if Phalang Pracharat still tries to perpetuate [Prayuth’s] power, then the Democrats will not invite them to a coalition.”

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Innovative Fine Dining ‘Le Petit Chef’ Coming to Bangkok (Sponsored)

BANGKOK — For the first time in Thailand, a new, entirely innovative fine dining experience based around the culinary exploits of “Le Petit Chef” comes to the Embassy Room and invites you to embark on a unique culinary journey across the Silk Road in the footsteps of the legendary traveller Marco Polo. It involves a small chef in front of you on the table taking you through an immersive 3D animated culinary journey starting 27th March – 31st July, 2019 for four months.

Following its hugely successful launch in Dubai and the United Arab Emirates, Dinner Time Story takes guests on a journey in the footsteps of Marco Polo from Marseilles to Arabia, India, the Himalayas to China. All through using cutting edge 3D visual technology and effective storytelling through flavours, ingredients, sights, sounds and tastes. Chef de Cuisine Pierre Tavernier expresses, “We cook and create dishes every day to bring joy to our diners through fresh and sustainable produce and well-balanced flavours.  I am excited to be a part of something unique and provide our diners with a different dining experience and of course, a different kind of dining pleasure from the Embassy Room”.

Designed to allow groups to eat together, Dinner Time Story is all about sharing this unique experience using 3D visual technology to create an animated show placed on top of their table cloth, right under their knife and fork. As well as a tiny-sized chef moving around his table, muttering in French cooking up delicious concoctions, guests will experience birds, boats, and fire-breathing dragons fly over their plate as they embark on this unique visual culinary journey.

Balraj Pannu, Dinner Time Story’s producer, has paired together with Park Hyatt Bangkok to host  the world’s smallest chef for four months, and says the following with regards to the unique concept: “Unlike many other dining shows we have created our story around the food. We believe that the gourmet cuisine should be the main focus, with the story-telling aspect accentuating each dish while also keeping diners entertained and enchanted throughout their meal.”

“We are absolutely thrilled to be hosting and offering this dining experience for the first time in Bangkok.  It will bring something new for all to enjoy whether you are a foodie, a couple, a family and will even be a fantastic corporate experience as well as for those visiting the city. We welcome all guests to enjoy and embark on this journey while the show is here,” says Sebastian Krack, Director of Food & Beverage.

The original concept and character of Le Petit Chef was created in the studio of the Belgian artist collective Skullmapping, founded in 2010 by the award-winning filmmaker Filip Sterckx and owner Antoon Verbeeck. Visual Mapping, usually seen as huge video mapping projections at major events is now available in miniature in a more intimate atmosphere thanks to Le Petit Chef.

Le Petit Chef – in the footsteps of Marco Polo – is currently running shows 10 times a week at the private dining room of Embassy Room at Park Hyatt Bangkok starting from 27th March – 31st July, 2019. Weekly sessions include below available seatings:

Sundays –Wednesdays: 7:00 p.m. and Thursdays –Saturdays: 7:00 p.m. and 9:30 p.m.

Each journey includes a 5-course set dinner menu specially prepared by Chef de Cuisine Pierre Tavernier and a unique 3D animated journey:

JOURNEY A – THB 3,299++ per person food only

JOURNEY B- THB 3,999++ per person food only

WINE PAIRING THB 1,199++ per person

CHAMPAGNE & WINE PAIRING – THB 1,599++ per person

For reservations and group bookings, please visit lepetitchef.asia/parkhyattbangkok
#lepetitchefbkk

FB: facebook.com/embassyroom

IG: Instagram.com/embassyroom

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Chiang Mai Tops World Pollution Charts

A nozzle sprays water from atop a building Monday in Chiang Mai as the city is covered with smog.
A nozzle sprays water from atop a building Monday in Chiang Mai as the city is covered with smog.

BANGKOK — Chiang Mai earned the dubious distinction of being the most-polluted city in the world Tuesday morning as air pollution continues to surge.

Image: Air Visual
Image: AirVisual

Chiang Mai’s air pollution index this morning spiked to the “very unhealthy” level of 234, with ultrafine particulate density nearly 180 micrograms per cubic meter, according to independent monitoring organization AirVisual. Bangkok was ranked the 9th most-polluted city, with average particle concentrations of 80 micrograms per cubic meter.

Read: Chiang Mai’s Foul Air No Priority to Bangkok, North Complains

Rounding out the top 10 were cities including Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia; Lahore, Pakistan; Kathmandu, Nepal; and Hanoi, Vietnam.

On Twitter, #PM25particles became the No. 1 trending hashtag in Thailand. Most comments complained about government inaction, though the problem in the north has persisted for years. PM2.5 particles are the smallest and most harmful type of air pollution.

Several northern provinces also saw air quality deteriorate. Pollution this morning rose to “unhealthy” levels in Nan, Lamphun, Lampang, Mae Hong Son and Prae.

A recent study by the University of Chicago found life expectancy in Thailand is shortened by over two years on average due to prolonged exposure to air pollution.

Darker red areas signify higher air pollution in a screenshot of a real-time map on Tuesday morning. Graphic: AirVisual
Darker red areas signify higher air pollution in a screenshot of a real-time map on Tuesday morning. Graphic: AirVisual

Related stories:

Breathe in Thailand and Die Up to 4 Years Sooner: Research

Smog Grounds Flights in Northern Thailand

Smog Surges Over Thailand’s Two Major Cities

As Bangkok Clears, Provinces Choke on Seasonal Smoke

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Footballer Hakeem Happy to Become Australian Citizen

Hakeem al-Araiby, a former Bahraini international soccer player and refugee, displays his certificate after becoming an Australian citizen Tuesday, four weeks after escaping extradition to his homeland during a much-publicized detention in a Bangkok prison, in Melbourne. Photo: David Crosling / AAP Image via AP
Hakeem al-Araiby, a former Bahraini international soccer player and refugee, displays his certificate after becoming an Australian citizen Tuesday, four weeks after escaping extradition to his homeland during a much-publicized detention in a Bangkok prison, in Melbourne. Photo: David Crosling / AAP Image via AP

SYDNEY — A former Bahraini soccer player and refugee has become an Australian citizen, after detention in a Thai prison and an extradition request from his homeland raised international concern.

Hakeem al-Araiby told reporters he’s “an Aussie now” and is happy to be safe.

The 25-year-old soccer player fled Bahrain citing political repression and had lived under refugee status in Australia for more than a year until he was detained in Bangkok in November while on holiday.

Bahrain wanted him returned to serve a prison sentence for a vandalism conviction he denies, but Thailand withdrew the extradition case last month after sustained pressure from the Australian government and soccer bodies.

He became an Australian citizen along with 200 other people at a ceremony in Melbourne on Tuesday.

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